Introduction to Linguistics Meeting 2

Meeting II
Introduction to Linguistics
Siti Mukminatun, M.Hum.

Several areas of studies in
Linguistics
General or theoretical linguistics
Descriptive linguistics
Comparative and Historical Linguistics
Applied Linguistics

Several areas of studies in
Linguistics
General linguistics
a question as how the linguist defines his object of study;
the properties he assumes all languages must have
descriptive linguistics
the main task of the linguists to describe languages in a
scientific fashion.
comparative and historical linguistics
the historical development of a language.

Applied linguistics
the study of language and linguistics in relation to
practical problems.

What is a linguist?
• A person who studies linguistics.
• Linguists does not need to be fluent in
languages.
• They must have a wide experience of
different types of languages.

Linguistics



The systematic study of language
Study language in scientific manner

Scientific manner
1. Objective or disinterested

2. Empirical method
Empiric
Observation, description, and explanation

How does linguistics differ from
traditional grammar
• Linguistics is descriptive not prescriptive.
interested in what is said not what they
think ought to be said.
• Linguists regard the spoken language as
primary not the written.
• It does not force languages into Latin

The scope of linguistics
• Phonetics
the study of the production and perception of speech sounds
• Phonology
the study of the sound patterns of language. It is concerned with
how sounds are organized in a language
• Syntax

arrangement and the forms of words
• Semantics
deals with meanings of words
• Pragmatics
deals with how speakers use language in ways which cannot
predicted from linguistics alone. This is the expanding topic of
semantics

• Sociolinguistics
the study of language and society
• applied linguistics,
the application of linguistics to language
teaching
• Psycholinguistics
the study of language and mind
• Stylistics
the study of language and literature
• Sociology, anthropology, philosophy, literature,
languages, psychology


• Synchronic linguistics
the analysis of language at a single point
in time
• Diachronic linguistics
dealt with before historical

• Phonology, syntax, and semantics are
bread and butter of linguistics.
Grammar
phonology

syntax

semantics

What is language?
• The specialized sound signaling system which
seems to be genetically programmed to develop
in humans.
• Humans can communicate in numerous other

ways; they can wink, wave, smile, tap someone
on the shoulder, etc.
• Humans can transfer language to other media;
written symbols, Braille, sign language.
• Language based on sound is more widespread,
and perhaps more basic.

The characteristics of
language
• Use of sound signals
several advantages
• Arbitrariness
there is no link whatsoever between the
signal and the message. The symbols are arbitrary.
Onomatopoeic words are exceptions, but there are
relatively few.
• The need for learning
• Duality
the organization of language into two layers- a layer of
sounds which combine into a second layer of larger units

• Displacement
human language can communicate about things that are
absent as easily as about things that are present.



The characteristics of
language
Creativity (productivity)

human can produce novel utterances whenever
they want to.
• Patterning
Human language is most definitely not a
haphazard heap of individual items. They do not
juxtapose sounds and words in a random way.
They ring the changes on a few well-defined
patterns.
• Structure dependence


Human language vs animal
communication
• Both human and animal use signaling
system which uses sounds
• Duality and displacement are extremely
rare in the animal world.
• Creativity seems not to be present in an
animal communication
• Patterning and structure dependence may
also be unique language features.

Origin of language
• How and when did we start to talk?
• Probably developed in east Africa
1. humans had to view the world in certain
ways
2. they are able to produce a range of
sounds
3. they must have attained the ‘naming
insight.


The role of language
• Persuading and influencing
• Communicating feelings and emotions
• For aesthetic reason